Authority of the Advisory Board for Cuba Broadcasting to Act in the Absence of a Presidentially Designated Chairperson

CourtDepartment of Justice Office of Legal Counsel
DecidedJanuary 4, 2000
StatusPublished

This text of Authority of the Advisory Board for Cuba Broadcasting to Act in the Absence of a Presidentially Designated Chairperson (Authority of the Advisory Board for Cuba Broadcasting to Act in the Absence of a Presidentially Designated Chairperson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Authority of the Advisory Board for Cuba Broadcasting to Act in the Absence of a Presidentially Designated Chairperson, (olc 2000).

Opinion

Authority of the Advisory Board for Cuba Broadcasting to Act in the Absence of a Presidentially Designated Chairperson The adv iso ry B o ard for C uba Broadcasting has the authority to m eet and to conduct business without a p residentially d esignated chairperson o r an acting chairperson.

The advisory B o ard for C uba Broadcasting does not have the authority to elect an acting chairperson.

January 4, 2000

M em o ran d u m O p in io n fo r t h e A d v is o r y B o a r d fo r C u b a B r o a d c a s t in g

You have asked for our opinion whether the Advisory Board for Cuba Broad­ casting ( “ Board” ), in the absence o f a presidentially designated chairperson, may discharge its statutory responsibilities with a Board-elected acting chairperson.1 Your letter indicates that the Board has attempted to meet with an acting chair­ person whom the Board elected, but that these meetings have not taken place because the USIA and the International Broadcasting Board (“ IBB” ) have declined to authorize the necessary travel orders. According to your letter, the USIA and the IBB did not authorize travel orders because they believe that the Board lacks authority to function without a presidentially designated chairperson. Although your letter is somewhat ambiguous on the point, your framing of the issue appears to assume that the Board’s ability to elect an acting chairperson is an essential condition for it to operate in the absence of a presidentially des­ ignated chairperson. Because we do not think it necessarily follows that the Board may meet and conduct its business only if there is a presidentially designated chairperson or an acting chairperson, we consider separately (1) whether the Board may carry out its statutory duties without a presidentially designated chairperson or an acting chairperson and (2) whether the Board has the authority to elect an acting chairperson. We conclude that the Board may meet and conduct business in the absence of a presidentially designated chairperson or an acting chairperson. We also conclude that the Board has no authority to elect an acting chairperson.

I. Background

The Board was established under section 5 of the Radio Broadcast to Cuba Act. Pub. L. No. 98-111, §5, 97 Stat. 749, 750-51 (1983) (codified as amended at 22 U.S.C.A. § 1465c (West Supp. 1999)).2 It consists of nine members

1See Letter for Randolph D Moss, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, from Christopher D Coursen, Board (June 7, 1999). In addition to the views expressed in your letter, we have also considered the views o f the United States Information Agency ( “ USIA” ), which it provided at our request See Letter for Randolph D Moss, Acting Assistant Attorney General, O ffice o f Legal Counsel, from Les Jin, General Counsel, USIA (Oct. 1, 1999). 2 The statutory provisions governing the Board, as amended, are collectively referred to as the “ Act” in this memorandum

24 Authority o f the Advisory Board fo r Cuba Broadcasting to Act in the Absence o f a Presidentially Designated Chairperson

appointed by the President, with the advice and consent of the Senate. 22 U.S.C.A. § 1465c(a). The President designates one member to serve as chairperson. Id. The members are appointed to terms of three years and may continue to serve at the expiration of their terms until successors are appointed and qualified. Id. § 1465c(c). Under the Act, the Board is to “ review the effectiveness of the activities carried out under this subchapter [relating to radio broadcasting to Cuba] and the Tele­ vision Broadcasting to Cuba Act and shall make recommendations to the President and the Broadcasting Board of Governors as it may consider necessary.” Id. § 1465c(b). According to your letter, the Board conducts business through periodic meetings at which a quorum gathers to address issues within the Board’s statutory purview. Because members of the Board are located throughout the country, it is necessary to provide travel orders to pay for members to attend these meetings. Jorge Mas Canosa, who was the presidentially designated chairperson, died on November 23, 1997.3 Since Mr. Mas’s death, the Board has been without a presi­ dentially designated chairperson. Nevertheless, it held two meetings, one in December 1997 and a second in February 1998, presided over by a member des­ ignated by the Board. On April 15, 1998, the Board voted to elect an acting chair­ person to assume the functions otherwise performed by a presidentially designated chairperson. The Board has not met since that time, however, because the USIA and the IBB have rejected the Board’s requests for travel orders on the ground that the Board lacks authority to function in the absence of a presidentially des­ ignated chairperson.

II. Authority of the Board to Conduct Business Without a Chairperson

We believe that, under the Act and general principles regarding the operation of boards, the Board has the authority to meet and to conduct business without either a presidentially designated or an acting chairperson. The Act vests the Board as a whole, rather than any individual member, with the authority and responsi­ bility to carry out the statutory functions for which it was created:

The Board shall review the effectiveness of the activities carried out under this subchapter and the Television Broadcasting to Cuba Act and shall make recommendations to the President and the Broadcasting Board of Governors as it may consider necessary.

22 U.S.C.A. § 1465c(b). In contrast, the Act assigns to the chairperson the single, managerial function of appointing the staff director for the Board. See Pub. L. No. 101-246, § 245(d), 104 Stat. 15, 62 (1990), as amended, reprinted in 22

3 The factual background discussed in this paragraph is based on the facts as described in your letter requesting our opinion. See supra note 1.

25 Opinions o f the Office o f Legal Counsel in Volume 24

U.S.C.A. § 1465c note. There is no suggestion in the language of the Act — let alone any express statement — that the Board is prohibited from meeting or con­ ducting business without a presidentially designated or acting chairperson. More generally, the Act expresses Congress’s intent that the Board’s operations not be terminated. In addition to providing that members of the Board may con­ tinue to serve after their terms have expired, 22 U.S.C.A. § 1465c(c), the Act states that, “ [notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Board shall remain in effect indefinitely.” Id. § 1465c(g). Furthermore, no general principle prohibits the Board from meeting and acting in the absence of a chairperson. To the contrary, where no statutory provision or regulation expressly restricts a board’s ability to meet or act, governing prin­ ciples support the authority of that board to continue to carry out its functions. For example, this Office applied the principle “ that the basic premise governing deliberative bodies is that the majority rules” when we resolved a dispute between members of the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board (“ Compliance Board” ) and its chairperson over the authority to call an additional meeting o f the Compliance Board. See Letter for Mason H. Rose V, Chairperson, United States Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board at 2 (Sept. 17, 1981). Citing a Compliance Board rule under which “ [e]mergency meetings of the Board shall be called by the Chairperson to deal with important matters arising between regular meetings which require urgent action,” the chair­ person argued that only he could call an additional meeting (unless the Board suspended the rules). Id. We distinguished the cited rule, since it addressed only emergency meetings and the members were seeking to call an additional, non­ emergency meeting. Id. at 2-3.

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